Described as having set “high standards of excellence for all lawyers in Indiana,” Ken Falk, legal director for
the ACLU of Indiana, is being honored Monday by Wabash College for his decades of legal service.

Courtroom artists have provided the images that go along with some of the most famous events in legal history. When judges
prohibit cameras and video equipment at trials and hearings, television stations and newspapers turn to artists to provide
the visuals.

A project by the Indiana State Bar Association and currently on display at Conner Prairie seeks to highlight the beauty of
Indiana’s courthouses, which are not only the centers of law, but focal pieces for small town centers.

Supreme Court of the United States Justice Antonin Scalia was remembered as an intellectual judge who had a profound impact
on the nation’s highest court, but also as friendly and personable in one-on-one conversations by Indiana judges and
attorneys who had interactions with him.

Harper Lee, the American writer whose book “To Kill a Mockingbird” was voted the best novel of the 20th century
and became a classroom standard for the study of racial injustice in the U.S., has died. She was 89.<

Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law 3L Jordan Kyle competed this weekend at the U.S. Olympic marathon trials
in Los Angeles in the hopes of representing the United States at the summer Olympics in Brazil.

As part of Indiana Lawyer’s commemoration of its silver anniversary this year, we asked a varied group of attorneys
to look ahead to the year 2040. They outlined what they thought the profession would be like, how they hoped the profession
would change, and what they did not want the profession to become.

As young men, Lee Hamilton and William Ruckelshaus followed their passion for public life to Washington, D.C., where they
left their imprint on the legislative and executive branches at a time the country and its attitudes were changing.